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Saturday, November 28, 2009 12:00 AM

For funds with drive, there's no place like home

Shirley Won

WHAT ARE WE LOOKING FOR?
Global smaller-company funds with momentum.

Small- to mid-cap stocks tend to outperform early in an economic recovery. They are rebounding after being beaten up during a downturn like last year's market collapse. Unlike their larger peers, they don't have dividends to help support their stocks.

TODAY'S SEARCH
We checked the year-to-date returns for the best performers in the global small- to mid-equity-cap group until Nov. 20. U.S. dollar and duplicate versions of funds were excluded.

WHAT DID WE FIND?
There is no place like home.

Redwood Global Small Cap Fund was the leader, surging 110 per cent to Nov. 20. Its return is nearly double that of runner-up Mackenzie Cundill Recovery and its 60-per-cent return.

Looking under the hood of the Redwood global fund, we found stocks of Canadian-listed companies. So what gives?

"If you look at where the businesses are - as opposed to where the listing are - we are very global," said manager Michael Decter of LDIC Inc.

The assets of the firms in the fund are 60 per cent outside of North America, he said. "We like the protection of North American-listed companies because there is a more rigorous set of listing requirements."

The dominance of domestic-listed firms also stems from concerns about a strong loonie that could hurt returns when translated back into the Canadian dollar.

The value-oriented fund, which is 30 per cent invested in gold, energy and materials stocks, incorporates Mr. Decter's view of economic trends. While the fund now resembles a natural resource fund, "we could be in totally different industries in six months," he said. "With the U.S. dollar declining, there is a big movement particularly to gold and oil as a way of offsetting the dollar." He is upbeat on prices for gold and oil for at least the next two to three quarters. "At some point, this will reverse, and we would expect to hopefully be on the sidelines on gold and oil."

Big winners in the portfolio include Mercator Minerals Ltd., a molybdenum play, and zinc producer Breakwater Resources Ltd. Both are no longer in his portfolio. He still holds another major mover, Alliance Grain Traders Income Fund, a Canadian exporter of pulse crops like lentils.

The rebounding Asian economy should drive oil and base metals prices higher, he said. "The whole base metals complex is going to do very well because you have had the prices go up based largely on the stimulus in China. But we are now seeing the stimulus in North America start to work its way through the infrastructure spends."

Global Small/Mid Cap Equity Funds as of Nov. 20
Name Oct. 31, Assets $Mil Latest MER % Nov. 20, YTD % Oct. 31, YTD % 2008 return % 2007 return %
Redwood Global Small Cap 3.5 2.18 110.3% 100.0%
Mackenzie Cundill Recovery 'C' 1316.4 2.48 60.1% 57.5% -53.8% 27.3%
Webb Enhanced Growth 4.5 54.2% 47.4%
Tmpltn Global Smaller Co 577.7 2.69 50.6% 47.4% -38.8% -7.4%
Trimark Global Small Co Class A 22.4 2.46 47.1% 41.5% -37.8%
Brandes Global Small Cap Equity 144.6 2.57 41.9% 41.5% -37.6% -29.7%
Mawer Global Small Cap 12.8 2.35 39.9% 38.5% -29.9%
Manulife Mawer Global Small Cap Fd 30.7 2.70 39.6% 37.7%
Quadrus US & Intl Specialty Class 26.9 2.97 37.2% 32.8% -36.6% -2.2%
Chou Europe 8.5 1.78 36.0% 30.8% -44.0% -15.1%
Dynamic Pwr Global Navigator Cl 8.1 2.79 35.1% 27.6%
Counsel Global Small Cap-A 4.3 2.81 34.0% 29.7% -35.6% -7.5%
Trimark Glo Mid-Cap Equ Private Pl 38.1 2.13 29.8% 27.8% -36.4% -15.9%
Altamira Global Small Co. 43.8 2.83 29.7% 26.7% -32.1% -9.9%
View Full Table

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Number Cruncher Contributors

Scott Adams

Scott Adams is the investment editor for Report On Business and Globe Investor. He has been a business journalist for more than 10 years, worked as an associate analyst on Bay Street and has been The Globe and Mail Investment Editor since spring 2007.

 

Rob Carrick

Rob Carrick has been writing about personal finance, business and economics for close to 20 years. He joined The Globe and Mail in late 1996 as an investment reporter and has been personal finance columnist since November 1998. You can follow him on Facebook at Rob Carrick – Personal Finance.

 

John Heinzl

John Heinzl has been covering business and financial markets for the Globe and Mail since 1990.

 

Steve Ladurantaye

Steve Ladurantaye wrote about technology companies in Ottawa before reporting for the Peterborough Examiner and Kingston Whig-Standard, where he won a National Newspaper Award for explanatory journalism. After joining the Globe and Mail in 2007, his work has regularly appeared in Report On Business and Globe Investor Magazine.

 

David Parkinson

David Parkinson has been covering business and financial markets since 1990, and has been with The Globe and Mail since 2000. A Calgary native, he received a Southam Fellowship from the University of Toronto in 1999-2000, studying international political economics.

 

Shirley Won

Shirley Won covers the fund industry and investments. She joined the Globe and Mail in 1996, and has also worked at the Montreal Gazette and Canadian Press.

 

Gordon Edall

Gordon Edall is the deputy investment editor for Report On Business and Globe Investor. Prior to joining The Globe and Mail in fall 2006, he worked for BNN producing TV shows including Squeezeplay and Market Call.